VEGOILS-Palm snaps 4-day losing streak as demand picks up

(Recasts, adds trader quote)

* Malaysia's Nov 1-10 palm exports rise 1.3 pct m/m-ITS

* Exports for same period ease 0.2 pct m/m-SGS

* Palm oil to drop to 2,180 ringgit - technicals

* Malaysia end-Oct palm stocks rise to 20-mth high of 2.17

mln T -MPOB

By Anuradha Raghu

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 10 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures

snapped a four-day losing streak on Monday as export demand

picked up, with prices further lifted as investors covered short

positions ahead of a U.S. government report on its grains

acreage.

The U.S Department of Agriculture is scheduled release its

global supply-demand report for farm products at 1700 GMT that

is expected to show ample world supplies.

"There was lots of short covering from foreign trade house

and funds ahead of the USDA report tonight," said a trader with

a local commodities brokerage in Malaysia.

Palm oil prices were also supported by a report from the

Malaysian Palm Oil Board that showed end-stocks in the world's

No. 2 producer rose 3.7 percent to a 20-month high of 2.17

million tonnes in October, just above a Reuters poll estimate of

2.16 million tonnes.

The benchmark January contract on the Bursa

Malaysia Derivatives Exchange rose 1.9 percent to 2,237 ringgit

($672) per tonne by Monday's close.

Total traded volume stood at 49,488 lots of 25 tonnes, above

the daily average of 35,000 lots.

Shipments of Malaysian palm oil products rose 1.3 percent to

400,614 tonnes between Nov. 1 and 10, according to cargo

surveyor Intertek Testing Services (ITS), with China increasing

imports even as Europe and India trimmed theirs.

Societe Generale de Surveillance reported that exports for

the same period eased 0.2 percent to 395,249 tonnes shipped.

Technicals were bearish and showed palm oil may fall to

2,180 ringgit per tonne, as indicated by a Fibonacci retracement

analysis, Reuters market analyst Wang Tao said.

Last week palm recorded its biggest weekly fall in three

months, with a 4.7 percent drop, dragged by steep losses in

crude oil and soyoil prices that could dent food and fuel demand

for the oil.

But on Monday, the U.S. soyoil contract for December

rose 0.9 percent in late Asian trade, while the most active May

soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodities Exchange

gained 1 percent.

Oil markets also recovered. Brent crude rose by $1 towards

$85 a barrel on Monday, climbing for a second straight session

as protests in Libya disrupted supply and the U.S. dollar fell

away from four-year highs.

The MPOB said that exports of Malaysian palm oil products in

the month of October fell 1.4 percent to 1.61 million tonnes,

slightly below expectations of a 3.1 percent drop. Crude palm

oil production fell 0.2 percent to 1.89 million tonnes.

Market players said Malaysian palm production is also in

focus in November and December. Output typically weakens towards

the year-end as the rainy monsoon season unfurls, bringing

thunderstorms and heavy floods to plantations.

Floods complicate harvesting and transportation of fresh

fruit bunches to mills where they have to be quickly crushed,

and delays can result in poorer quality of oil produced.

Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 1040 GMT

Contract Month Last Change Low High Volume

MY PALM OIL NOV4 2205 +13.00 2185 2205 147

MY PALM OIL DEC4 2234 +34.00 2204 2237 1724

MY PALM OIL JAN5 2237 +42.00 2197 2241 26259

CHINA PALM OLEIN MAY5 5366 +62.00 5280 5368 764366

CHINA SOYOIL MAY5 5956 +56.00 5904 5962 456296

CBOT SOY OIL DEC4 32.69 +0.10 32.40 32.77 7162

INDIA PALM OIL NOV4 449.10 +0.10 445.80 449.50 480

INDIA SOYOIL NOV4 586.65 -2.45 585.80 590.00 9765

NYMEX CRUDE DEC4 79.71 +1.06 78.35 79.85 38182

Palm oil prices in Malaysian ringgit per tonne

CBOT soy oil in U.S. cents per pound

Dalian soy oil and RBD palm olein in Chinese yuan per tonne

India soy oil in Indian rupee per 10 kg

Crude in U.S. dollars per barrel

($1 = 3.3295 Malaysian ringgit)

($1 = 6.1196 Chinese yuan)

($1 = 61.49 Indian rupee)

(Editing by Anupama Dwivedi and Louise Heavens)